On 15/04/11 11:31, rameo wrote:
On Apr 15, 11:17 am, Tony Mechelynck<[email protected]>
wrote:
On 15/04/11 09:06, rameo wrote:
When I start VIM it shows my tabs and reloads my buffers from the last
time.
I use a session to do this.
au VimEnter * exe "so d:\\Session.vim"
au VimLeave * exe "'mksession! d:\\Session.vim'"
My reopened files do not have syntax coloring.
I have to do ":e" in every file where I need syntax coloring to view
syntax coloring.
I know that I can add "localoptions" in sessionoptions but this slows
down my vim (I noted that it uses 20-25% more CPU). Without
"localoptions" my vim is much faster.
How do you resolve this?
Don't you use sessions?
try adding either
syntax on
or (near the top)
runtime vimrc_example.vim
(it's not necessary to use both) to your vimrc (or make one if you don't
yet have one, using
:e ~/_vimrc
inside Vim).
Best regards,
Tony.
--
Dimensions will always be expressed in the least usable term.
Velocity, for example, will be expressed in furlongs per fortnight.
Hello Tony,
I already had "syntax on" near the top of my _vimrc file.
...
I noted that vim doesn't detect filetypes at startup when files are
restored (by sourcing a session).
I have
filetype on
filetype plugin on
written in my _vimrc
Best regards,
Rameo
Whell, how exactly do you restore your sessions? When I used "gvim -S"
with :mksession it did read my vimrc. (Now I use a handtyped Session.vim
which does exactly what I want and not all the :mksession hocus-pocus.)
Best regards,
Tony.
--
hundred-and-one symptoms of being an internet addict:
58. You turn on your computer and turn off your wife.
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